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🔴 Live: Kilo Code on Product Hunt

OSS AI coding assistant @Kilo Code is launching today. This is their 3rd launch on @Product Hunt.
Hey! I am here for the first time, let’s talk about virtual dressing rooms
Hey friends,
I am Elena, founder of NexTry. I am here for the first time and I need your support. We are training models for virtual try-on on 5 million images. You can test them on our website NexTry.app. I need your honest feedback. Not all sections work now, we will fix this soon.
You can change clothes on your own photo, you can change two pieces of clothing, and you can use a mask. Right now only the FashionSwap section works and all three modes inside it: Multiple Garments, Single Garment, Only Clothes.
You can compare this model with any other models. I will be grateful for any feedback, and yes, I was scared to write this post ) like any founder ))) I really want to find support here )
Product of the Week Winners: March 3-9 Spotlight
Hello Product Hunt friends!
Juan checking in from the community team. Hope your week is off to a great start!
AI Interfaces of the Future (YC video w/ Rafael from Notion Calendar)
I really enjoyed this breakdown by @raphaelschaad and @aaron_epstein (YC partner):
They walk through some cutting edge AI apps:
@Vapi - voice api for devs
@Retell AI - build voice agents
@Gumloop - AI zapier
@AnswerGrid - outbound research
@Polymet - AI product designer
Zuni - ai in your chrome sidebar
and @Argil - video clone generation
They talk about some recurring themes:
- When prompts take a long time, give the user something engaging to do while they're waiting.
- Canvas is a powerful UX paradigm for understanding workflows. I appreciated Rafael's insight that zooming in / out can allow for understanding a complex workflow at multiple levels of fidelity.
- Voice interfaces - latency and interruptibility are the main factors in a good user experience.
- Discoverability / templates. The problem with LLM prompts is they're so open - I don't know what I can do with them. Have some easy templates at your users' fingertips as a starting point.
One big area I found missing is the subtleties of code assistants - In particular, I feel like the cutting edge of LLM interfaces is being explored by the likes of @Cursor , @Windsurf - and other code assistants that are being used in high-stakes production code.
The other reason code assistants are interesting to me is that it appears these products are winning based on the interface, not the underlying models (since those are fungible).
If you use Windsurf, Cursor, I'd love to hear what about the UX design feels new / superior.


